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Title: CHAPTER 24 THE NATION AT WAR Author: Timothy Hall Last modified by: kfarshtey Created Date: 6/25/1998 8:58:36 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Essential Questions:


1
  • Essential Questions
  • What was the role of the US in World War I?
  • Which foreign policy would have been most
    appropriate for the U.S. from 1914 to 1917 given
    the outbreak of war in Europe? TRs Big
    Stick Diplomacy, Tafts Dollar Diplomacy, or
    Wilsons Moral Diplomacy

2
American Neutrality
  • When war was declared in Europe in June 1914,
    Wilson proclaimed American neutrality due to
  • Tradition of non-involvement
  • Progressives women organized against war
  • America as a land of immigrants should not take
    sides in Europe
  • The majority of the U.S. supported the Allies but
    wanted to avoid war

3
Threats to American Neutrality
Germany blamed the war on Russian expansion
French revenge
England appealed to cultural ties propaganda of
German atrocities
  • U.S. neutrality was threatened from the very
    beginning
  • England Germany appealed to the U.S. to enter
    on their side
  • U.S. trade with England France provided a
    strong bond
  • The most serious threat proved to be Germanys
    violation of the right to freedom of the seas

4
Freedom of the Seas
  • England began a blockade around Germany to cut
    off war supplies
  • Wilson protested that the blockade infringed on
    Americas right to trade as a neutral nation
  • But the flood of Allied war orders helped fuel
    the U.S. economy
  • Loans trade drew the U.S. closer to the Allies
    while trade with Germany all but ended

By 1916, the U.S. was a neutral nation in name
only
The U.S. gave 2.5 billion in loans to the
Allies, but only 27 million to the Central Powers
Trade with the Allies caused U.S. trade to jump
from 2 billion to 6 billion from 1913 to 1916
5
The U-Boat Threat
  • Germanys response to the British blockade was
    unrestricted submarine warfare in 1915
  • Americans died during u-boat attacks on the
    Lusitania, Arabic, Sussex from 1915 to 1916
  • In the Sussex Pledge, Germany agreed to limit
    attacks if the U.S. helped end Englands blockade

Despite the Sussex Pledge, Congress passed the
National Defense Act in 1916 that increased the
size of the U.S. army navy
6
Germany used U-boats to create a naval blockade
of England
7
Election of 1916
  • In the 1916 election, Wilson balanced contrasting
    stances
  • He appealed to progressives anti-war voters
    with the slogan He kept us out of war
  • But argued for preparedness by building up the
    military in case the U.S. joins the war
  • Wilson won by affirming 2 goals freedom of the
    seas neutrality

8
America Joins the Allies
German leaders knew this might entice the USA to
enter the warbut did it anyway
  • In December 1916, Germany led a massive European
    offensive resumed unrestricted submarine
    warfare to win the war
  • In 1917, Wilson hoped for a peace without
    victory but key events made neutrality
    impossible
  • German subs sunk 5 U.S. ships
  • The interception of Zimmerman Telegram fueled
    U.S. anger

9
Rationale behind the Zimmerman Note The U.S.
Mexico almost went to war in June 1916 over
events related to the Mexican Revolution (Huerta,
Carranza, Pancho Villa)
10
April 2, 1917, Wilson asked Congress for a
declaration of war to make the world safe for
democracy
11
Over There American Military
Participation in WW I
12
WW I Alliances Battlefronts, 1914-1917
When the U.S. entered the war in 1917, the
Allies were on the brink of defeat
Mutinies were common in the French army the
British lost at Flanders, Belgium
U-boats effectively limited Allied supplies
The Russian armistice in 1917 allowed Germany to
move its full army to the western front
13
Mobilization
The army navy increased in size but military
leaders had not prepared a plan for war (To plan
for war is to violate the terms of neutrality)
  • Wilson named John Pershing to head the American
    Expeditionary Force (AEF), but despite Wilsons
    preparedness campaign, the U.S. was not prepared
    for full scale war
  • Many wanted a volunteer army, but Wilson pressed
    Congress to pass a Selective Service Act (24
    million registered 2.8 million were drafted to
    fight in Europe)

14
The 1st U.S. troops arrived via convoy in
June 1917 but did not see action until early 1918
15
The U.S. on the Western Front, 1918
American soldiers saw their 1st action in May
1918 at Chateau Thierry outside Paris helped
resist a last-ditch German offensive
The Allied counter-attack led by the U.S.
France pushed into Germany
16
War in the Trenches
  • The arrival of fresh American soldiers war
    supplies raised Allied morale at a crucial time
  • By October 1918, the German govt knew the war
    was over
  • Turkey, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria were all out
    of the war
  • Nov 11, 1918 Germany signed an armistice with the
    Allies

17
Conclusions
9 million soldiers 5 million civilians died
U.S. had only 320,000 casualties (6.8)
American soldiers were only engaged in battle for
8 months
  • The Great War was a total war but the U.S.
    effort paled in comparison to other Allied
    forces
  • The U.S. reluctantly entered WW I after 3 years
    of neutrality played a supportive (not a
    central) military role in the war
  • But, WW I had a huge impact on the American
    economic, political, cultural homefront

Artillery, poison gas, grenades, machine guns led
to trench warfare war of attrition
Allies faced 52 casualties the Central Powers
had 57
18
Wilsons Fourteen Points
  • Wilson believed WW I presented an opportunity for
    the USA to lead the world towards peace
  • Wilson saw moral diplomacy as the antidote to
    imperialism military aggression
  • Wilsons plan for peace was the Fourteen Points
    based on progressive liberalism improved
    international relations

A faith in government to solve international
problems
19
The Treaty of Versailles
Hungary
Austria
Yugoslavia
  • Wilsons Fourteen Points contained 3 main themes
  • Creating new nations out of weakened empires
    based on national self-determination
  • New international rules freedom of the seas, no
    more secret treaties, reduced militarism
  • Proposed a League of Nations to solve future
    problems

Poland
Czechoslovakia
Turkey
20
Wilsons Fourteen Points
Wilson made a mistake by not including any key
Republicans in his Paris delegation
  • Wilson traveled to the Paris Peace Conference in
    1919 to help create the Treaty of Versailles
  • He hoped his Fourteen Points would become the
    framework for the peace treaty
  • But he realized the need to compromise other
    issues if he wanted a League of Nations

21
Major Provisions of the Treaty of Versailles
22
The Treaty of Paris, 1919
  • The treaty was a compromise
  • Poland, Czech, Yugoslavia were formed but
    Germanys colonies were split up by the victors
  • Germany had to accept the war guilt clause
    pay 33 billion
  • The treaty did not mention free trade or freedom
    of seas
  • Despite calls for open covenants, the treaty was
    drafted in secret

Wilson originally hoped for a peace without
victory
23
Europe before the war
Europe after the war
New countries!
Divided empires!
New countries!
New countries!
New countries!
New countries!
Divided empires!
New countries!
Russia turns Communist (USSR)
24
A Peace of Paris
Article 10The Members of the League undertake
to respect preserve as against
external aggression the territorial integrity and
existing political independence of all Members of
the League. In case
of any such aggression or in case of any threat
or danger of such aggression the Council shall
advise upon the means by which this obligation
shall be fulfilled.
  • But, the Big Four agreed to Wilsons League of
    Nations
  • Created a General Assembly of 27 nations
    Executive Council
  • A Court of International Justice
  • Arbitration economic sanctions would be used to
    settle conflicts against nations that resort to
    war
  • Article X asked nations to protect each others
    independence

Executive Council consisted of the Big Four,
Japan, 4 other elected nations
25
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26
  • On June 28, 1919, the Treaty of Versailles was
    signed by Germany officially ended WW I

27
A Peace at Paris
  • All the major European powers signed the treaty
    joined the League ? but not the U.S.
  • Polls showed U.S. support for the treaty, but the
    Senate wanted to amend the Leagues covenant to
    keep the U.S. from begin forced to fight foreign
    wars
  • Wilson refused to compromise weaken the League
    of Nations

28
Rejection in the Senate
  • 2/3 of the Senate was needed for the U.S. to
    approve the treaty
  • The mild reservationists wanted changes to
    slightly weaken the League
  • The strong reservationists led by Henry Cabot
    Lodge wanted major changes to Article X
  • The irreconcilables refused to allow the U.S.
    to join the League

29
Rejection in the Senate
  • Senate Majority Leader Lodge led the attack on
    the treaty League
  • Instead of compromising, Wilson tried to pressure
    the Senate with a cross-country speaking tour
  • The tour was popular but ineffective in
    pressuring Lodge
  • During the tour, Wilson had a stroke remained
    bed-ridden

Like he did at the Paris Peace Conference
For the rest of his presidency, Edith Wilson
served as de facto president
30
Rejection in the Senate
  • Wilsons failure to compromise led the
    irreconcilables strong reservations to
    defeat the treaty
  • The United States never signed the Treaty of
    Versailles nor joined the League of Nations
  • In 1920, the Republican Warren Harding won in a
    landslide signaling a return to normalcy

Compromise? Let Lodge compromise Better a
thousand times to go down fighting than to dip
your colors to a dishonorable compromise.
Woodrow Wilson
31
The League of Nations (Such as it is)
  • The League of Nations was formed in early 1920s
  • But almost nothing like the organization that
    Wilson had dreamed up and fought for
  • No USA, no Soviet Union, no Germany
  • Result Very little teeth, very little authority
    to do anything

32
ConclusionsPost-War Disillusionment
33
Postwar Disillusionment
The war killed something precious and perhaps
irretrievable in the hearts of thinking men and
women.
  • The impact of the Great War
  • The U.S. played a key role the international
    peace process
  • Led to unprecedented economic prosperity govt
    involvement but killed Progressivism
  • To the next generation, the war seemed futile
    wasteful
  • Americans welcomed President Hardings return to
    normalcy

A promise not of heroics but healing not
nostrums but normalcy not revolutions but
restoration.
34
One Perspective from 1941
  • In 1919 we had a golden opportunity, an
    opportunity unprecedented in all history, to
    assume the leadership of the worlda golden
    opportunity handed to us on the proverbial silver
    platter. We did not understand that opportunity.
    Wilson mishandled it. We rejected it. The
    opportunity perished. We bungled it in the 1920s
    and in the confusions of the 1930s we killed it.
  • Henry Luce, The American Century
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